Description

Book Synopsis
Who is the human in media philosophy? Although media philosophers have argued since the twentieth century that media are fundamental to being human, this question has not been explicitly asked and answered in the field. Armond R. Towns demonstrates that humanity in media philosophy has implicitly referred to a social Darwinian understanding of the human as a Western, white, male, capitalist figure. Building on concepts from Black studies and cultural studies, Towns develops an insightful critique of this dominant conception of the human in media philosophy and introduces a foundation for Black media philosophy. Delving into the narratives of the Underground Railroad, the politics of the Black Panther Party, and the digitization of Michael Brown's killing, On Black Media Philosophy deftly illustrates that media are not only important for Western Humanity but central to alternative Black epistemologies and other ways of being human.

Table of Contents
Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction. The Medium Is the Message, Revisited:
Media and Black Epistemologies

1. Technological Darwinism
2. Black Escapism on the Underground (Black) Anthropocene
3. Toward a Theory of Intercommunal Media
4. Black “Matter” Lives: Michael Brown and Digital Afterlives
Conclusion. The Reparations of the Earth

Notes
Bibliography
Index

On Black Media Philosophy

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    A Hardback by Armond R. Towns

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      View other formats and editions of On Black Media Philosophy by Armond R. Towns

      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 01/03/2022
      ISBN13: 9780520355798, 978-0520355798
      ISBN10: 0520355792

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Who is the human in media philosophy? Although media philosophers have argued since the twentieth century that media are fundamental to being human, this question has not been explicitly asked and answered in the field. Armond R. Towns demonstrates that humanity in media philosophy has implicitly referred to a social Darwinian understanding of the human as a Western, white, male, capitalist figure. Building on concepts from Black studies and cultural studies, Towns develops an insightful critique of this dominant conception of the human in media philosophy and introduces a foundation for Black media philosophy. Delving into the narratives of the Underground Railroad, the politics of the Black Panther Party, and the digitization of Michael Brown's killing, On Black Media Philosophy deftly illustrates that media are not only important for Western Humanity but central to alternative Black epistemologies and other ways of being human.

      Table of Contents
      Contents

      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgments

      Introduction. The Medium Is the Message, Revisited:
      Media and Black Epistemologies

      1. Technological Darwinism
      2. Black Escapism on the Underground (Black) Anthropocene
      3. Toward a Theory of Intercommunal Media
      4. Black “Matter” Lives: Michael Brown and Digital Afterlives
      Conclusion. The Reparations of the Earth

      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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